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DoD Efforts in ISO Standardization Initiatives “Some Observations on Creating IT Standards”

DoD Efforts in ISO Standardization Initiatives “Some Observations on Creating IT Standards”. Nonna Bond and Jerry Smith DSP Conference 23-25 May 2006 Arlington. A Few Observations. 1 – Enigma *Standards are Boring! *Special Interests and Egos are Involved

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DoD Efforts in ISO Standardization Initiatives “Some Observations on Creating IT Standards”

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  1. DoD Efforts in ISO Standardization Initiatives“Some Observations on Creating IT Standards” Nonna Bond and Jerry Smith DSP Conference 23-25 May 2006 Arlington

  2. A Few Observations 1 – Enigma *Standards are Boring! *Special Interests and Egos are Involved *Significant Opportunities to Make a Real Difference 2 - IT Standards Are Important to DoD *Public Law & Policy Rely on Private Sector *DoD participation essential *“Right” Standards Are Key to DoD’s Complex Needs Interoperability - Information Superiority - Logistics Transformation 3 - Lessons Learned *Good Process Characteristics *Failure Attributes *Value of ‘Seed Funding’ DSP Conference 2006

  3. OBSERVATION #1 Attitudes: Standards are Boring! They get in the way! They cost too much! They don’t generate profits! Who Cares? DSP Conference 2006

  4. Engineers and Technologists • Standards & The Standardization Process Do Not Generate High Interest And Excitement • Love to chase technology • Strive to make it “better” than ‘standard’ • Standards work brings little reward DSP Conference 2006

  5. ProgramandProjectManagers are keenly interested in budget and schedule but frequently view standards as obstacles DSP Conference 2006

  6. don’t see standards, or participation in standards activities, as a positive influence on their stock price for the next quarter! CEO’s DSP Conference 2006

  7. PoliticiansView of Standardsand the Standards Process “Not considered to be a high profile issue” DSP Conference 2006

  8. USERS/ CONSUMERS • Only interested in the final product • Fail to appreciate the role, value, or process of standards in helping them obtain interoperable products and services. DSP Conference 2006

  9. Capturing the Hearts and Minds of People Reality: Standards and the Standardization Process are Not of Much Interest (Indeed, Boring! ) to Most People. • Standards & the standardization process do not generate high interest and excitement among Engineers and Technologists • Program/Project Managers are keenly interested in budget and schedule but frequently view standards as obstacles. • Not considered to be a high profile issue with Politicians. • CEO's don’t see standards/participation in standards activities, as a positive influence on stock price for the next quarter • Users are only interested in the final product and fail to appreciate the role, value, or process of standards in helping them obtain interoperable products and services. An effective standards approach needs to consider these realities. DSP Conference 2006

  10. OBSERVATION #2 • The Global IT Standards Development Environment is Immense! • Growing Recognition That Standards Are Important for Information Exchange • Many Focused Players Working in Specific Technology Areas • Special Interests and Egos Are Involved • Lots of Duplication, Fragmentation, Waste DSP Conference 2006

  11. The IT Standards Universe Consortia ISO IEC Professional Societies I TU Government Industry Associations UN DSP Conference 2006

  12. ISSS ISO DoD & NSS Standards Landscape PLAYERS • Users • SDOs/SSOs • Consortia • Professional Societies • Industry Associations • Vendors • Test Organizations POSI POSI POSI DSP Conference 2006

  13. Some Causes of Fragmentationin Global IT Standards Setting • Growing Acceptance That Standards Can Convey Strategic Advantage. • Increasing National And Regional Economic Competition. • Desire To Challenge Early Market Leader Dominance In Discrete Product Areas (E.G., Operating Systems). • Realization That Standards Are Key To Interaction With Business Partners • Desire For Standards Process Speed To Keep Pace With Rapid Technology Evolution. • Egos DSP Conference 2006

  14. OBSERVATION #3 • Too Many Standards • Gross Overabundance • Many Are Conflicting • Often Document Old Technology • They Are Produced • With Little Consideration of User Real Needs • Without Market Place Support • Many Are the Product of Ego Trips DSP Conference 2006

  15. Correlation of Growth of Specificationsand STANDARDS GROWTH Number of Standards Produced Annually Common Weeds! Source: Augustine’s Laws DSP Conference 2006 Source: Augustine's Laws

  16. The U.S., by sheer numbers, has more standards available for application than most other nations -- but, a significant portion of these document obsolescent technology, are redundant, or are overlapping. Source: National Center for Manufacturing Sciences STANDARDS OUTPUT U.S. France India Japan Italy Spain 0 20000 40000 60000 80000 100000 DSP Conference 2006 Source: ANSI

  17. PARETO STRIKES AGAIN! 80% of the orders for individual standards are for only 15% to 20%of the total number published. Source: ANSI Most Published Standards are Seldom Used! CONCLUSION: DSP Conference 2006

  18. OBSERVATION #4 Timing of standards with technology is critical DSP Conference 2006

  19. Time Natural Tension Too small of a GAP is Restrictive Optimal GAP Promotes Innovation & Creativity Too much GAP is costly! Standards Technology The GAP between Standards & Technology is the link that associates the two. DSP Conference 2006

  20. OBSERVATION #5 • Dod Must Care Deeply About IT Standards Development • Must Select The “Right” Standards To Meet DoD’s Complex Needs • Standards Are A Key Enabler! • Interoperability • Netcentricity • Information Superiority • Logistics Transformation DSP Conference 2006

  21. INTERDEPENDENCE STRONG DEFENSE HEALTHY ECONOMY Maintain Global Leadership of Standards to Enhance U.S. Competitiveness! DSP Conference 2006

  22. DoD Interest in External Standards Activities • Driving the incorporation of Warfighter and DOD business operations requirements into non-government de jure and 'commercial' standards, encourages industry to develop and build compliant commercial products (available as open standards conforming COTS) • As more and more vendor's offer compliant COTS, prices go down, the number of standardized products goes up, and reliability, robustness, and interchangeability increases • This significantly enhances scalability and interoperability • Thus, by influencing the specification of international standards, competition to deliver required products increases while making newly developed US-built products more marketable globally DSP Conference 2006

  23. STATUATORY REQUIREMENTS • Use Technical Standards developed by Voluntary Consensus Standards Bodies (SDO/SSO) • Participate in External SDO/SSO to Represent US Interests. United States Code Title 10, Section 2223; the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996, PL 104-113, National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (PL 104-113), 7 March 1996; various National Defense Authorization Acts; “Federal Participation in the Development and Use of Voluntary Consensus Standards and in Conformity Assessment Activities”, Office of Management and Budget Circular A-119, revised, 10 February 1998; (Circular A-119 is based on 31 U.S.C. [United States Code] 1111); DoD Instruction 4630.8, “Procedures for Interoperability and Supportability of Information Technology (IT) and National Security Systems (NSS)” Defense Cataloging & Standardization Act, TITLE 10, U.S. CODE CH 145, SECT 2451-2457; PL 107-314 DSP Conference 2006

  24. Information -- not Military Might -- Will Dominate Battlefields of 21st Century “Historically, the force that occupied the high ground had the greatest advantage … ‘High Ground’ now consists of information from satellites and aerial surveillance systems.” Former Secretary of Defense William Cohen DSP Conference 2006

  25. WHY STANDARDS? Never Underestimate the Importance of Getting the Right Data at the Right Time! DSP Conference 2006

  26. OBSERVATION #6 Much Similarity in SDO/SSO Process of Standards Creation DSP Conference 2006

  27. IT Standards Development Processes • International Standards Development • National Standards Development • De jure Process • Professional Society Process • Industry Association Process • Consortia Process • Government Process DSP Conference 2006

  28. STANDARDS TAXONOMY EXAMPLE InternationalVoluntary Company Internal Voluntary Other SDO/SSO Government Regulatory Commercial Single Country Accredited Regional Purchase Specifications User Driven International User Driven Mil Specs FIPs Vendor Driven VendorDriven Professional Society Industry Association Consortia Accredited Accredited Other DSP Conference 2006 Other Other Accredited

  29. Some Paradigm Comparisons DSP Conference 2006

  30. Choosing the right “process” is not trivial Accreditation affords consistent process Accredited process is well-tested and “off the shelf” Consensus is significant Broad participation yields better quality results but makes for slower process Development ConsensusBuilding Generic IT Standards Life Cycle Consistency Via Accredited Process Revise, Reaffirm, Withdraw Maintenance DSP Conference 2006

  31. What Does A GoodIT StandardsStrategy Look Like? DSP Conference 2006

  32. Goals of Standards Process • Well-Defined Product: • Consistent implementations • Coherent functionality • Commercial Viability: • Allows range of implementations • Commercial products are possible • Promotes wide adoption • No “Standards-for-Standards-Sake” (e.g., some standards consultant dominated projects) • Wide acceptance: • Many conforming implementations • Few bugs: • Low number of defect reports DSP Conference 2006

  33. Management of  IT Standards Activities • Governing Concept Needs To Separate The Management Of Standardization Activities From The Technical Work • Standards Manager Owns The Process • Sponsors And Stakeholders Own The Specific Substantive Content  • Manage IT Standards Activities By Employing A Lifecycle Portfolio With Real Accountability • Decisions Based Upon • Mission Goals • Architecture • Risk • Performance • Expected Return On Investment (ROI) DSP Conference 2006

  34. Management of  IT Standards Activities • Include Relationships To: • Business & Technology Environment • Support Of The Stakeholders • Support Key Business Operations • Ensuring Stakeholder Involvement Is Critical • Make It Easy For Them To Participate Via A Low-drag Administrative Process • Very Important To Make Standards Visible, Understandable And Readily Available DSP Conference 2006

  35. Openness …. Significance: • Important For Users To Specify As ‘Mandated’ Only “Open” IT Standards And Specifications • Avoid Lawsuits • Perceived Endorsement • Avoid Royalty Liabilities [See White Paper] DSP Conference 2006

  36. CONSENSUS …. • Consensus Is Defined As A General Agreement, Characterized By The Absence Of Sustained Opposition To Substantial Issues By Any Important Part Of The Concerned Interests And By A Process That Involves Seeking To Take Into Account The Views Of All Parties Concerned And To Reconcile Any Conflicting Arguments. • Consensus Need Not Imply Unanimity. DSP Conference 2006

  37. CONSENSUS …. • Most Useful and Stable Standards Come From A Voluntary Consensus Process • The Broader the Range of Consensus, the Higher Quality of the Resulting Specification • Consensus Building • Collaboration, Harmonization, Refinement • Public Reviews As Soon As Possible • Public Comments • Resolution Of Comments • Approval Stages: • Working Draft • Committee Draft • Draft Standard • Approved Standard DSP Conference 2006

  38. Consensus Process Experience & Implications Hi QUALITY OF RESULT # of PARTICIPANTS Low TIME DSP Conference 2006

  39. OBSERVATION #7 ‘Seed Funding’ to jump start a project works well! DSP Conference 2006

  40. JUMP-START KEY PROJECTS …. …. …. …. …. …. …. END EDIT END DSP Conference 2006 TIME

  41. OBSERVATION #8 Cultural Differences Have An Impact on Standards and Their Use DSP Conference 2006

  42. Observations of Cultural Differences With Respect to Standards Compliance Country Requirement Compliance Rules U.S. EXCEPT Prohibited Permitted Germany EXCEPT Prohibited Permitted Permitted Russia EVEN Prohibited France EVEN PROHIBITED! Permitted DSP Conference 2006

  43. A Few Lessons Learned DSP Conference 2006

  44. Market Place Support • The Market Place - Not A Standards Committee - Determines Which Standards Are The Winners! • Need Good, Desirable, Useful, Workable, And Effective Standards That: • Realistically Solve User Problems • Possess Genuine Utility • Supported In The Market Place • Else, They Become ‘Shelf Ware’ • Need Vendors To Build COTS That Employ Open Standards “Success Of A Standard Is Measured By The Number Of Competing Implementations That Build Upon That Standard, Not In The Creation Of The Specification Itself.” Carl Cargill DSP Conference 2006

  45. Success Attributes • Successful Standards Processes Yield the Right Results (appropriate, correct & complete) • Standards are relevant, meeting agreed criteria and satisfying real needs by providing added value. • Standards are responsiveto the real world; they use available, current technology and do not unnecessarily invalidate existing products or processes. • Standards are performance-based, specifying essential characteristics rather than detailed designs. • The Process is Timely; Purely Administrative Matters Do Not Slow Down the Work DSP Conference 2006

  46. Failure Attributes • Failures: only recognized years later • Incorporate New/Untried Technology • Why Waste Committee Time? • Ignore Commercial Interests • Who Will Implement The Standard? • Ignore Public Comments • Who Will Buy Standardized Products? • Creeping Featurism • The Schedule Killer! DSP Conference 2006

  47. PREMO Example BACKFIRE! New Technology Market Place Need Vendor Support Broad Active Support Schedule Slip BUT LOST THE BUBBLE!

  48. VRML Example New Technology Market Place Need Vendor Support Broad Active Support Fast Process [via “Seed Funding”] WIN - WIN - WIN!

  49. “Watch Out” • When participating in an inter-national standards development project, be aware of competing national goals. E.g., EU strategy of “strangulation by meeting schedule” – They hold back-to-back meetings spaced a few days apart in Europe to effectively preclude US active participation. DSP Conference 2006

  50. Current Challenges • Open Source Phenomena • Resourcing • Keeping Pace with Technology • Spreading “the Word” • Incorporating the Lessons DSP Conference 2006

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